Actually, I have no idea why I of all people came up with the "time is money" argument. My behaviour as a freelancer makes it pretty clear that in practice I don't put much value on my time at all. Once I took a four-day job in Buckinghamshire where the daily bus and coach fares cost me half a day's pay every day, and the journey was several hours long there and back. On my last day I got sent home early, so not only did I not get paid for the afternoon but I had to wait two hours for the coach. The journey home that day was five hours door to door.
I think it's because I've always had the attitude "WORK! TAKE WORK! DO WORK! Don't worry about anything except GETTING WORK because it could all dry up tomorrow and then you'll be all bitter and unemployed!" Which turned out to be completely true, actually.
But yeah. You're right that business people often think they're making rational economic decisions when actually they're just feeding egos or fitting in with the dominant culture. Most businesses will invest in some kind of conference calling equipment because they think they need to have it, but then will never use it because it isn't good enough.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-12 08:23 am (UTC)I think it's because I've always had the attitude "WORK! TAKE WORK! DO WORK! Don't worry about anything except GETTING WORK because it could all dry up tomorrow and then you'll be all bitter and unemployed!" Which turned out to be completely true, actually.
But yeah. You're right that business people often think they're making rational economic decisions when actually they're just feeding egos or fitting in with the dominant culture. Most businesses will invest in some kind of conference calling equipment because they think they need to have it, but then will never use it because it isn't good enough.